No. "Rather than" is wrong. The proper construction is " as well... as."
If you are addressing a married woman use senora. If it is a child or an unmarried woman use senorita.
You can refer to a female teacher as "Ms." followed by her last name (e.g., Ms. Smith) or as "Mrs." if you know she is married. Alternatively, you can use "Miss" followed by her last name if you are aware she is unmarried.
That depends on whether the phrase is a subject or predicate. "Mary and I were married last year." "The pastor married Mary and me."
it means that name was your original name and not the name that you go by or if you are married it was your original last name before you got married
It means "You are married.", and the statement is directed towards a woman, since "casada" is female. As a question, it means "Are you married?".
No, correctly you would say you "wish you had gotten married".
The correct spelling is bachelor (an unmarried man, or more specifically one who has never married).
Mrs. is for a married women Ms. is used for an unmarried women Mr. is used for a man married or unmarried
Ms for either/or, Miss for unmarried. The former is used more frequently these days as Miss is seen to be slightly old-fashioned, or not "politically correct" as it should make no difference whether a woman is married or unmarried (or formerly married) in official or business relationships.
is the urmila matondker married or unmarried
Married people don't care what other people think of them, unmarried people do ;)
Single means NEVER been married. Unmarried signifies that you have been married.
A. R. Rehman is not married. He is still unmarried and single. He is the only individual from Bollywood who has won an Oscar.
a married Italian woman the answers in the question Signora or Madame. As in the English Mrs. or Madam.
Ms. can work for married or not married.
Lady Gaga is currently unmarried.
No, ministers can be unmarried.